0:10Skip to 0 minutes and 10 secondsA good starting point for understanding soils is understanding how they form and how they develop. So we need to understand what the factors are that contribute to the formation of soils and the processes that go on within soils that allow them to develop. I've come to the Lake District, in the northwest of England, to learn about how soils form. Phil Haygarth is professor of Soil and Water Science at Lancaster University. Phil, what are the main factors that cause soil to form? Well, when I teach soil formation, there is a really simple formula which we can use to describe that. That formula was derived from a very famous forerunner of soil science called Hans Jenny.

0:56Skip to 0 minutes and 56 secondsAnd Hans Jenny described soil formation in terms of a very simple formula. And that simple formula, I tell all my students, is CLORPT. And that's a very simple way of remembering it-- CLORPT. And that basically is five soil-forming factors-- Climate, Organisms, Relief, Parent material, and Time. And if you think of that as five soil-forming factors, CLORPT is a really great way to remember it. And that's how I'm going to explain it to you now. OK. So the first of those factors was climate. How's climate important? Well, climate is important if you think of it in terms of extremes.

1:38Skip to 1 minute and 38 secondsWherever you are in the world, it's the extremes of climate which generate the weathering of the basic parent material which form the soil. So, firstly, let's think of the extremes of rainfall. Very high rainfall or very dry rainfall promotes very different conditions. So, in one extreme, you've got deserts. And the other extreme, you've got the tropics. So high or low rainfall, extremes of rainfall, are very important. Second part of climate will be the extremes of temperature. So it's like freezing and thawing or heating and drying. They're all very important at promoting the weathering of the soil and the weathering of the rock and the material which goes towards forming the soil.

2:23Skip to 2 minutes and 23 secondsAnd thirdly, you can think of the-- the wind actually plays a very important role, in some places, too, in terms of eroding material and eroding the rocks. So it's the extremes of climate which all play that role in soil weathering, which is part of that climate role. OK. So that's all the processes that make the rocks into smaller particles and turn them into soil. What about organisms? How do they play a role? Organisms are critical. They're the living part of the soil. OK? So the obvious one is plants. So here we are, on this mountain hillside. We've got a bit of grassland, here. Plants, as we all know-- they grow in soil.

3:04Skip to 3 minutes and 4 secondsWhat do plants do when they grow in soil? They put roots down. And when those roots penetrate into the soil, they help the weathering process. They help break the soil up. And they also move nutrients and chemicals around into the soil. That's plants. What about animals? Yeah, animals, also. Now animals are really interesting, because you've got a whole spectrum of animals. You know, we're got moles. We've got sort of macro-- we call them "macrofauna." All these things that borrow into the soil, they all play a role in digging it out and creating that weathering, that erosion processing, creating ultimately the structure, really. So we've got large animals that burrow around in the soil. But we also have smaller animals, too.

3:45Skip to 3 minutes and 45 secondsThe classic one is the earthworm. The classic earthworm plays a really key role in turning over the soil and forming it, ingesting it, excreting it, and moving all these soil particles around. But then, also, we go to much finer-scale organisms. Small bacteria, small fungi. Really microscopic creatures. And they play a huge role in turning over all the biological activity in the soil. So soil organisms, from a range of sizes, both plants and animals, absolutely critical to soil formation. So climate, organisms, relief. Relief. That's next. What do you mean by "relief"? Yeah, relief's an interesting one. Well, the other word that people often use for relief is "topography." It's the actual shape of the landscape.

4:33Skip to 4 minutes and 33 secondsAnd here we are, in this beautiful mountain landscape. We don't get a better example of extremes of topography or extremes of relief. The shape of a landscape, be it on a steep hill like we have down here, or a mountaintop, or a valley bottom, are all critical to playing a role for how the soil is formed. If the soil is on a steep slope, the soil is very thin. It's unable to form, because of gravity-- because of the shape of the slope, and because of the way water drains across it. Well, we're on a steep slope, at the moment. Let's see if that works.

5:11Skip to 5 minutes and 11 secondsSo if you have a look at this slope, here-- here we are. This mountain face. All this rock, all this scree slope. You can almost imagine the soils are going to be thin, because it's just covered in rock. OK. Well, let's test your theory. And, uh-- well, straight away, I'm hitting rock. So I've got just a few centimetres of soil. So, yeah, very shallow. So now, if we go down the bottom of the slope, we should have a much deeper soil. I think we will do. Let's go and have a look.

5:45Skip to 5 minutes and 45 secondsHere we are. We've come down from the hillside, and we're now in the valley bottom. I would wager that this is going to be a much deeper soil, here, in the valley bottom. So let's see if I'm right. Oh, yep. Definitely a (LAUGHING) deep soil, there. Yeah. So the spade's gone really deeply in, and there seems to be lots more there. That's because we're in the valley bottom now. Now we're still in a mountain environment, of course. And I would wager if you went on down into the valley beyond, right down into the agricultural area, we'd get even much deeper soils. But the point is relief-- topography-- makes a real difference of soil formation.

6:23Skip to 6 minutes and 23 secondsSo next on the list, after relief, is parent material. And that's the rocks that the soil forms from, isn't it? Absolutely. Think of parent material as the core ingredients of the soil. It's the raw, mineral stuff which the soil is formed from. And here in this mountainside we can see some volcanic, hard rock here, which is the essence-- the basic parent material for the soils that are forming around here. And that's, if you like-- the classic, really, is soil is formed from rock. But also I want to emphasise that parent material can take different types of forms which might not be as obvious.

7:02Skip to 7 minutes and 2 secondsParent materials can also be formed from glacial deposits, from glacial tills or glacial outwash material, which can form as a result of past glacials. So a parent material, in some circumstances, could be boulder clay or an amalgam of different composite materials. Another thing to bear in mind is that rivers and estuaries can also deposit silt and sediment, which also constitutes, at some times, the parent material for a soil to form. There will be other contrasting rock types that will lead to very different conditions? So if you take, for example, a limestone, a limestone is very calcareous. It has completely different chemical properties.

7:41Skip to 7 minutes and 41 secondsAnd that really has a very different effect on the soils that are formed in calcareous conditions to soils on these types of rocks, in these environments, which will be probably more acid. So it has effects on the chemistry, as well. So our final soil-forming factor is time. How long does it take for a soil to form? Well, as an interesting rule of thumb, for two to three centimetres of soil, it takes about 500 years to form. So that reminds us how precious soil is and how we need to look after it, because it takes so long. These soils, here, that we're stood on-- how long will they have taken to form? Well, we can take a clue from landscape history.

8:20Skip to 8 minutes and 20 secondsHere we are in a landscape which was formed in the last glaciation, which we know was about 10,000 years ago, here. So these soils around here are about 10,000 years old. In other parts of the globe, where we know landscape history's different-- for example, the geological history might be different-- some soils can be up to millions of years old. And an interesting fact is, of course, now, with increased human and anthropogenic activity, humans also interfere with the soil by coming along and doing stuff. Which leaves an interesting final point for reflection. Some people have suggested there's a sixth soil-forming factor, and that is human beings. So that was our five soil-forming factors. Next, we're going to look inside the soil.

How do soils form?

There are a number of factors involved in the formation and development of soils.

In this first of two videos, Professor Phil Haygarth describes the factors involved in soil formation.

Watch this video, which was filmed in the Lake District National Park in northern England. Which of the “CLORPT” factors that Phil describes do you think are the most influential in this area?

Think about where you live and whether those factors would be the same.